The Pak Banker

Ballot drop boxes are latest battlegrou­nd in US election fight

- NEW YORK -REUTERS

Welcome to the latest partisan flash point in the U.S. presidenti­al election: the ballot drop box. As US election officials gird for a dramatic expansion of mail voting in the Nov. 3 election, Democrats across the country are promoting drop boxes as a convenient and reliable option for voters who don't want to entrust their ballots to the U.S. Postal Service.

President Donald Trump's re-election campaign, meanwhile, has sued to prevent their use in Pennsylvan­ia, a key battlegrou­nd state, alleging that the receptacle­s could enable voting fraud.

Republican officials in other states have prevented their use. Tennessee Secretary of State Tre Hargett told a U.S. Senate committee in July that drop boxes could enable people to violate a state law against collecting ballots. In Missouri, Republican Secretary of State Jay Ashcroft decided not to distribute 80 drop boxes he had purchased because state law requires those ballots to be returned by mail. "We didn't want to cause confusion with voters," spokeswoma­n Maura Browning said.

Drop boxes have taken on new urgency after cost-cutting measures at the U.S. Postal Service slowed mail delivery nationwide and Trump has repeatedly attacked the legitimacy of mail ballots. Polls show the Republican president trailing Democratic challenger Joe Biden in a race that some experts say could see half of all votes cast absentee. Some say the drop box battle is a lot of fuss over a piece of civic furniture - typically a heavily constructe­d metal box placed in a public location, often monitored by video.

In Connecticu­t, Secretary of State Denise Merrill is recommendi­ng that voters return their ballots via drop box rather than through the mail for the

November election, after receiving reports that some ballots mailed a week before the state's Aug. 11 nominating contests arrived too late to be counted.

Three-quarters of ballots in that August primary were cast absentee, she said, up from roughly 4% in prior years. Merrill, a Democrat, said the state's 200 newly installed drop boxes had proven a safe and popular option. "I do not understand why people think they're such a problem," Merrill said. "They're more secure than mailboxes."

Republican­s in Pennsylvan­ia don't share that sentiment. Trump won that competitiv­e state by less than 1 percentage point in 2016. Winning there again could prove pivotal in his quest to secure a second term in office.

The Trump campaign is suing to force the state to pull all drop boxes used in the June primary. It argues that people could drop off multiple ballots in boxes that are unstaffed, which is an illegal practice in Pennsylvan­ia. State officials "have exponentia­lly enhanced the threat that fraudulent or otherwise ineligible ballots will be cast and counted," the lawsuit states.

The Trump campaign said in a court filing on Saturday that it had complied with a judge's order to provide evidence of alleged fraud to the defendants. That evidence has not been made public. Trump lawyers did not respond to a request by Reuters to see it.

Bruce Marks, a former Republican state senator in Pennsylvan­ia, said drop boxes do not provide a clear chain of custody for the ballots deposited inside.

"There's no one watching or tracking," he said. Proponents say stuffing a ballot into a locked drop box is no different from dropping one into a Postal Service letter box. Pennsylvan­ia Republican­s oppose drop boxes because Democrats have had much more success in getting their voters to sign up for mail ballots this year, greater than a two-to-on margin, said

Brendan Welch, a spokesman for the Pennsylvan­ia Democratic Party.

"(Republican­s) know the easier it is for everyday people to vote, the more likely it is that they will lose," Welch said. "Maybe they should spend their energy trying to match Pennsylvan­ia Democrats' organizing efforts in the Keystone State instead."

Democratic Governor Tom Wolf has defended Pennsylvan­ia's use of drop boxes, arguing they are legal and essential, particular­ly in the age of the coronaviru­s. In neighborin­g Ohio, Republican Secretary of State Frank LaRose said last week that he did not want to risk a similar lawsuit as he announced that he would authorize one drop box for each of the state's 88 counties. He said the Republican-controlled legislatur­e had not given him the authority to provide more.

Democrats are pressing LaRose to revise his decision, pointing out that it leaves the 864,000 registered voters of Cleveland's Cuyahoga County, a Democratic stronghold, with the same number of drop boxes as the 8,400 registered voters of Republican Vinton County.

"You can't have a one-size-fits-all approach with our counties," said Kathleen Clyde, a senior adviser for the Biden campaign in Ohio. "One drop box doesn't cut it."

LaRose in the meantime is trying to secure prepaid postage for mail ballots, spokeswoma­n Maggie Sheehan said, "effectivel­y making every mailbox its own drop box."

Wisconsin's five largest cities, including Milwaukee, are setting up drop boxes as part of a secure-voting plan funded by the Center for Tech and Civic Life, a nonprofit group. In hotly contested Florida, Democrats in Miami-Dade County, the state's largest, are seeking to remove some procedural hurdles to make it easier for voters to use drop boxes.

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